Published November 18, 2025 | Version v1
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Strongly correlated physics in organic open-shell quantum systems

  • 1. Integrated Systems Laboratory, ETH Zürich, Gloriastrasse 35, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland
  • 2. Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Überlandstrasse 129, CH-8600, Dübendorf, Switzerland
  • 3. Institute for Theoretical Physics, Vienna University of Technology, Wiedner Hauptstrasse 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, Austria
  • 4. Department of Theoretical Physics, Institute of Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Műegyetem rkp. 3., H-1111 Budapest, Hungary 5 HUN-REN-BME-BCE Quantum Technology Research Group
  • 5. Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Műegyetem rkp. 3., H-1111 Budapest, Hungary

Description

Strongly correlated physics arises from electron-electron scattering within partially filled orbitals. Organic molecules in open-shell configurations are therefore good candidates to exhibit many-body effects. We focus on electron transport in a two-terminal single-molecule junction setup, where the molecular bridge consists of an organic radical with a molecular orbital that hosts a single unpaired electron (SOMO). We perform beyond state-of-the-art numerical simulations combining an ab-initio
description of the chemical environment, with quantum field-theoretical techniques that account for many-body effects. The key observation is that the SOMO resonance is prone to splitting and we identify a giant electronic scattering rate as the driving many-body mechanism, akin to that of the Mott metal-to-insulator transition. By comparing linear and cyclic radicals, we show that the spatial distribution of the SOMO and its projection on the molecular backbone have dramatic consequences for the transport properties of the junction. We argue that the phenomenon and the underlying microscopic mechanism apply to a broad family of open-shell molecular systems, and can explain puzzling experimental observations such as suppressed conductance in radical junctions.

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Funding

MARVEL/ASM – Advanced Simulation Methods asm
NCCR MARVEL

References

Preprint (Preprint in which the data is discussed)
G. Gandus, A. Jayaraj, D. Passerone, R. Stadler, M. Luisier, & A. Valli, (2025). Strongly correlated physics in organic open-shell quantum systems., doi: 10.48550/arXiv.2301.00282